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Category: Enrique Tessieri

Ibrahim of Iraq: “Finland is a never-ending long dark tunnel without light”

Posted on July 21, 2018 by Migrant Tales

Do you remember the patient asylum seeker called Ibrahim*, who applied to hundreds of jobs in Finland and who finally got a job at Posti to deliver newspapers at homes? Well, Ibrahim is so fed up with Finland that he decided to move back to Iraq. 

“Even if you offered me a good-paying job, I would not stay in this country,” he said. “Finland is a never-ending long dark tunnel without light. For my own mental health, it is important I leave before it is too late.”

Having moved to Finland in October 2015, Ibrahim was always an exemplary person and has made many good friends during his stay in Finland. I have only seen him angry twice: When he got his application for asylum rejected the first time in 2016 and now.


Guidelines on what you can take back with you to Iraq. After almost three years, Ibrahim’s possessions must fit in two 23-kg pieces of luggage.

Ibrahim, a computer hardware and data centers specialist in Iraq, blames bad luck for his fate.

“For me, it was a big mistake coming to Finland,” he continued. “I was free from diseases. There is a lot of structural racism and as an asylum-seeker, you will always be a second-class citizen.”

Continue reading “Ibrahim of Iraq: “Finland is a never-ending long dark tunnel without light””

Revista Fennia: Paluu mistä olimme

Posted on July 21, 2018 by Migrant Tales

”Joskus menneisyys pelottaa minua.”
Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986)

Sokea argentiinalainen kirjailija Borges kuvasi levotonta Argentiina 1970-luvulla monella tavalla. Muistan yhä kun silloin eläkkeellä oleva Horacio-setäni lausui yhden Borgesin siteerauksista samana vuonna kun siviilipresidentti María Martínez de Perón syöstiin vallasta maaliskuu 24 päivä 1976.

”Borges sanoi,” setäni kertoi hymyillen, ”että demokratia on tilastojen väärinkäyttöä.”

Tähän lyhyeen lauseeseen oli pakattu kaikki mitä oli vialla Argentiinassa. Borges ja Horacio antoivat ymmärtää, että vallankaappaus oli hyvä asia, koska poistettiin tehoton presidentti joka oli sen lisäksi nainen ja peronisti. Hän, kuten Borges, eivät uskoneet argentiinalaiseen demokratiaan, erityisesti kun sisällissota ja taloudellinen sekasorto vain paheni Martínez de Perónin vallan aikana.


Lue alkuperänen juttu tästä.

Jos olet joskus vieraillut pohjoisessa Buenos Airesissa Floresin alueella, saatat törmätä moniin minun sukulaisiini. Näiden 1900-luvun alkupuolella rakennettujen pariisilaistyylisten talojen ja mukulakivikatujen varsilla kasvavien tammien katveessa asuu Horacio-setä.

Continue reading “Revista Fennia: Paluu mistä olimme”

Argentina’s issues with whitewashing and genocide. Like the crimes committed during the dirty war, they too should be addressed.

Posted on July 16, 2018July 6, 2024 by Migrant Tales

When I was young, I remember very well the racism that inflicted the Argentines. A friend of mine from Rosario highlighted this racism in the following example: A porteño (a resident of the capital Buenos Aires) told his friends that when they travel to countries like Peru they state that they are going to visit South America.

The more one reads Argentine history, genocide and whitewashing of Amerindians and Afro-Argentines become clearer.

From social thinker, Juan Bautista Alberdi (1810-84) to former President Faustino Sarmiento (1811-88), their suspicion and hatred of non-white Europeans is more than clear.


Juan Bautista Alberdi and Domingo Faustino Sarmiento. Sources: El Intransigente and Organization of American States.

In his most famous book, Bases y puntos de partida para la organización política de la República Argentina (1852), Alberdi states: “The indigenous does us justice by naming us Spaniards to this date. I don’t know of any distinguished person of our society that carries a Pehuenche or Auraucano [Amerindian] surname…[W]ho would want their sister or daughter to marry an infamous Araucanian and not a thousand times an English shoemaker?”

Sarmiento, considered the father of Argentina’s education system, not only despised Amerindians but was an ardent defender of white European racial purity. Of the Gauchos, the Argentine cowboy who were mestizos, he said that their only use was to serve as fertilizer when they died.

Sarmiento wrote in El Nacional of Nov. 25, 1857: “Will we be able to exterminate the Indians? For the savages of America, I feel an invincible repugnance that I cannot cure. Those scoundrels are not anything more than disgusting Indians that I would hang if they reappeared…”

Even today, an argument used by some to justify the genocide of the Amerindians is that they were so few. Thus genocide of the Amerindian was not a major crime because they were so few.

Some estimates place the number of Amerindians living outside colonial jurisdiction in the nineteenth century between 300,000 and 2 million.

Historical guilt

Some Argentines put a poker face to cover up the atrocities committed against the Amerindians with arguments by claiming that we are a melting pot.

Nothing could be further from the truth unless “melting pot” means white European.

Racist comments by some white Argentineans reinforce how racism and bigotry are still alive and kicking in the country. “White” in Argentina means anyone who has a European background. Those of mixed mestizo ethnicity, Europeans mixed with Amerindians, are called disrespectfully cabecita negra, or little black head.

In my research of the Finns of Argentina, who founded a Finnish colony in the province of Misiones in 1906, racism was present in the many interviews I did. When I asked one former late colonist how many races there existed, he responded three: “white, black, and pitch-black.”

The colonist whom I interviewed, admitted that race mixing was good but not with blacks. He said he would never accept his daughter marrying an Amerindian, black or member of the Romany community even if the person “were an airline captain.”


A family working at a corn field in Colonia Finlandesa. The picture was taken in 1978. Photo: Enrique Tessieri

In light of our problematic history with non-European whites, should we children and grandchildren of European migrants in Argentina feel guilty for the genocide and whitewashing that took place?

The answer to that question is clear. Recognizing the injustices committed against groups like the Amerindians and Afro-Argentines is a good start to healing wounds.

Acknowledging and correcting what happened to minority groups is similar to how the country has tried to come to grips with the atrocities committed by military regimes, in particular to those that ruled the country during the dirty war (1976-83).

If we as a nation forget our past atrocities and conveniently brush them under the rug, we are in danger of committing the same crimes again.

A person whom I’ve known since childhood was adopted as a baby by a white porteño family and who came from Amerindian parents.  When I met him in 2016, his hatred for Bolivians and other non-white nationals in Argentina surprised and shocked me.

“We got to kick all these Bolivians out of the country,” he said, adding that there are too many of them.

Whitewashing “Made in Argentina”

Throughout Argentine history, we have seen history whitewashed, turned upside down and then right side up again. Consider when Juan Manuel de Rosas (1793-1877), one of Argentina’s most important caudillos of the nineteenth century, went into exile in Great Britain in 1852. His enemies, and they were many, made certain that no plaza or street in Argentina would carry his name until 1989 when his remains were repatriated.

We saw the same happen after Juan Domingo Perón’s overthrow by the military in 1955 with Decree 4161 of 1956, which prohibited people from mentioning the names of Juan Perón and Eva Duarte de Perón.

Looking at the above examples, should we be surprised that so much whitewashing and genocide went on in Argentina?

Not at all.

We must remember that the millions of migrants that moved to Argentina in the nineteenth and twentieth century not only brought with them their physical belongings but also their prejudices and racism. Colonial powers like the United Kingdom, Spain, Portugal, and France reinforced with the examples of colonial oppression, exploitation, mass murder the genocide of groups like the Amerindians.

That racism is ever-present in the treatment of African migrants in Argentina today.

Mauricio Macri and the legacy of racism

Taking into account Argentina’s racialized society and its history of racism, President Mauricio Macri aims at scoring brownie points with the voters by spreading xenophobia and fear of outsiders.

“We can’t allow criminals to keep picking Argentina as a place to commit offenses,” he was quoted as saying in The Guardian. According to the London-based newspaper, the comment was made after Macri signed a controversial and far-reaching executive order that permits foreigners to be deported from Argentina.


Read the full story here.

Singling out and scapegoating certain immigrant groups is the same questionable example found today in the United States and in European countries. Such rhetoric is a slippery slope that can lead to the horrors we saw in Europe in the last century.

Argentina’s Security Minister Patricia Bullrich, who belongs to one of the country’s richest families, didn’t mind labeling and linking crime to immigration like far-right, anti-immigration parties in Europe.

She claimed that “Peruvian and Paraguayan citizens come here and end up killing each other for control of the drug trade.”

Such rhetoric is racist that aims to harm and victimize the good name of certain national and ethnic groups.

Argentina needs today more than ever an earnest debate about its history and how we wronged non-white European minorities.

Rafal Rada Mousa: A good ending to a long uncertain journey from Iraq to Finland

Posted on July 9, 2018 by Migrant Tales

Rafal Raad Mousa, 18, whose former pseudonym on Migrant Tales was Saboora,* is a very happy young woman together with her family. After a three-year wait in Finland, Rafal and her family of two brothers, sister, and mother now have a residence permit.

“I couldn’t believe my eyes when I read the letter and my mother started crying,” she said. “This residence permit took four years to get; we were one year in Turkey and three years in Finland.”

Rafal want to study and get a profession.

“I want to become a pharmacist after I graduate from high school,” she said. “After I graduate as a pharmacist, I’ll start studying painting.”

Rafal says that she likes to paint “because it’s fun.”

Those who know Rafal understand that painting is a way for her to make sense of her life, which has seen its fair share of strife and uncertainty.

On behalf of Migrant Tales and our readers, we wish Rafal and her family much success and a better life in Finland.


 

The “Moon and me” by Rafal Raad Mousa.

Continue reading “Rafal Rada Mousa: A good ending to a long uncertain journey from Iraq to Finland”

Thailand versus the Mediterranean: Your human value hinges on ethnic and cultural background

Posted on July 9, 2018 by Migrant Tales

We have all been reading about the rescue operation in northern Thailand and it raises a worrisome question: Why is there so much media coverage of twelve children trapped for sixteen days in a cave when between 23,000 and 28,500 of people have perished in the Mediterranean during 1993-2018 while trying to come to Europe?

While all lives are sacred, the reporting by the media of the trapped boys in Thailand expose the hypocrisy of our values. What the media stories are saying in between the lines is that your value as a human being hinges on the color of your ethnic and cultural background.


Read the full story here.

Those who disagree have only to look at the bloody and racist history of countries like the United States, the Americas and others like Australia.

Those tens of millions of Europeans that fled their continent not only carried their physical belongings but their spiritual baggage like racism and toxic attitudes. By turning a blind eye to the deaths in the Mediterranean, we are only confirming those attributes that enabled so much death and devastation in the world.

Continue reading “Thailand versus the Mediterranean: Your human value hinges on ethnic and cultural background”

EU summit and “controlled centers” for migrants: Déjà vu, bad excuse to do nothing

Posted on June 30, 2018 by Migrant Tales

My great grandfather left Europe for South America in the late nineteenth century for political reasons. I returned three generations later, and he probably wonders if I’m mad. Europe’s issues with racism, xenophobic scapegoating, and, eventually, war-mongering are entrenched deep in European soil waiting to bud. 

There is only one word that comes to mind after reading the decision on Friday by EU leaders to establish “controlled centers” for asylum seekers and migrants: déjà vu. If such centers  built in countries like Algeria, Morocco, Libya, Egypt, Niger, and on European soil, they will only expose our hypocrisy and lack of foresight and humanity. 

It is like subcontracting injustice to countries that are experts at creating such conditions.

Europe also forgets its history and racist legacy, which force millions to flee today their homes in other lands.

The question we should be asking is what is the end game of the EU and its answer to the “migrant problem?” What is the end-game of the whole economic region that is doing everything possible to keep Europe Christian and white?

The answer is in our history and the pyramid of hate.


 

Source: Study.com.

The decision by the EU reveals clearer than ever our leaders’ prejudices and suspicion of non-Christians and non-EU citizens who are not white.

If the EU summit’s vaguely-worded conclusions should give us hope, they do the opposite.

There are serious concerns about the new plan.

Iverna McGowan, director of Amnesty International’s European Institutions Office, said in a statement: “Plans to confine people who do reach Europe’s shores to “controlled” centers are alarming. This flimsy euphemism cannot must not dim our sensitives to the fact that EU leaders are moving towards a policy of detention for people who come to Europe seeking safety. A policy that if put into practice would be a far cry from the EU’s founding principles of solidarity and respect for human rights.”

But isn’t all of this a powerful whiff of historic déjà vu? It is another ineffective step towards solving the problem.

Instead of creating these already doomed-to-fail “controlled centers,” why not tackle the root of the problem directly?

  • Procclaim and enforce a common immigration policy based on fairness and human rights;
  • Central and Northern European countries can no longer wash their hands of the problem and leave it up to countries like Italy, Greece, Spain, and Malta to handle the challenge by themselves;
  • Apologize and offer compensation for the slave trade and the colonialism that continues to rob countries of their future and livelihood;
  • Stop teaching white history at European schools but one based on inclusiveness, cultural and ethnic diversity. In other words, everyone irrespective of his background should enjoy the same civil rights;
  • Changing nothing and sticking your head in the sand like now, Europe will end up embroiled in strife and new wars.

Since these suggestions are unrealistic in the context of today’s Europe, matters are bound to get worse.

 

A Moroccan called Majid who was deported despite being married to a Finn

Posted on June 28, 2018 by Migrant Tales

A Moroccan called Majid* got in touch with Migrant Tales who was deported in October despite marriage to a Finnish woman. The Finnish Immigration Service (Migri) claims that the marriage was arranged, but he denies such a claim. He is presently awaiting a decision by the administrative court to overturn MIgri’s decision. 

Majid was deported from Finland in October and he can not return to the country and the Schengen area for two years. He knows another Moroccan who was married to a Finn and who was deported like him.


 

Asylum seekers have had a tough time in Finland as our laws have tightened. This protestor went on a hunger strike in front of the little parliament in 2016.

“Ours is not a fake marriage,” the man said by phone from Morocco. “I love my wife very much, and she is very sad about our separation. My wife visited me, and she stayed with me for three months. It is expensive to travel back and forth from Finland to Morocco.”

According to Majid, his short time in Finland went well and he was able to adapt and be a part of society.

“I was living a normal life,” he continued. “I am a tolerant person with goals and who wanted to achieve them. I wanted to learn Finnish. When they deported me I was studying the Finnish language at a school seven kilometers from home. I used to walk or bike to school.”

Majid came to Finland in February 2016 and asked for asylum. His request was later turned down by Migri.

“I went to Migri in March [2017] to tell them about my marriage, which happened in the previous month,” he said. “Despite being married, they said I had to leave Finland because my request for asylum was turned down. That’s when the police took me to Metsälä [immigration removal center] where I was detained for a month.”

After moving to Finland and living in Oulu, Majid moved to Helsinki and lived with a Moroccan friend for four months. It is during this time when he met his future wife on the Internet. “We met, and we hit it off very well,” he said.

Even if Majid claims that the interview with Migri went well about his marriage to his wife, he claims that the police have done everything possible to destroy his marriage.

“The police told my wife that it was a mistake to marry a foreigner,” he said. “They told her that they know of many cases where foreign men take advantage of Finnish women. They marry just to get a residence permit.”

The man’s problems got worse when the police in a northern Finnish city asked him to come to the station.

“That’s when they detained me and locked me up in a police cell for three days,” he continued. “The only way I can see my wife for only a half an hour is in a city [abut 100km away] because there was no meeting room with a glass separation.”

Majid said that after two nights they woke him up at 4 am and said he was going to be deported. He could not call his lawyer or wife because the police took his phone.

“I was taken to Oulu, then to Helsinki, to Paris, where I boarded a plane with the police to Casablanca,” he said.

Despite all the legal problems and the battle with the authorities, Majid is hopeful that the administrative court will overrule Migri’s decision.

“I love my wife, I love Finland, and want to make my home in that country,” he concluded.

* The name of the person was changed to protect his identity. 

Viktor Orbán is one of the many scary faces of Europe’s violent and racist legacy

Posted on June 25, 2018 by Migrant Tales

“We created the opportunity to defend Hungary. A great battle is behind us. We have achieved a decisive victory.”

After the FIDEZ-KDNP alliance gave Hungarian strongman Viktor Orbán 133 out of 199 seats in the April parliamentary elections, where anti-immigrant and anti-EU liberal ideology was contested in a hostile campaign, the prime minister said that the vote was a decisive victory to defend the country.

After the election victory, Orbán is out to make good of his campaign promises, which aim to undermine further the country’s judiciary, academic and liberal democracy.

New laws, called Stop Soros legislation, aim to hit NGOs that help “illegal” migrants and with up to a year in prison terms and slap a 25% tax on associations that support immigration. One of the aims of the law, which is intentionally vague to grant wide enforcement powers, aims to protect what Orbán calls “Christian culture.”

The correct question to ask is what does “Christian culture” mean and what does it imply for the future of religious freedom in Hungary never mind democracy.

Zoltan Fleck, a professor of the faculty of law at the Eötvös Loránd University of Budapest, was quoted as saying in a BBC documentary that Hungary would not have qualified to become an EU member under the present system.

Balint Josa, who is program coördinator for United for Intercultural Action in Budapest, said that the new laws aim to impede the work of NGOs so that cooperation will be ever-difficult.

“In spite of the laws,” said Josa, who was publicly listed by the Orbán government as “an enemy” of the state, “NGOs should be vigilant and help each other because what is happening in Hungary can happen elsewhere in Europe. Populism is very attractive because it is an easy and fast way you get power.”

Josa warned that Hungary is inspiring similar Islamophobic and xenophobic populists in other European countries.

“[EU] Europe is based on cooperation and what they [the populists] offer is separation,” he continued. “They don’t offer any solutions in any areas.”



I compare the present health of the European Union to a patient with Alzheimer’s. In only four years, the deterioration is apparent. The difference is so pronounced that shocks you.

Continue reading “Viktor Orbán is one of the many scary faces of Europe’s violent and racist legacy”

The children of separated families in the US are telling us to change our greedy ways

Posted on June 19, 2018 by Migrant Tales

In Europe, the driver of millions of asylum seekers is us. We invaded with the United States and gave support to the destruction of Iraq and the rest of the Middle East. In Latin America, the driver of refugees to the United States is Washington’s big-stick policy and economic exploitation of the region’s wealth and opportunities. 

In both cases, the finger is pointing at us. The problem has its roots in history.

Is this how the so-called developed world is going to react to the ever-growing climate-change crisis?

Yes, you can be sure that is how the leaders of the United States and other major powers will react.

The children that the Trump administration is separating from their families and locking up in cages are the ones fighting to restore our sense of humanity. They are telling us that matters must change or else.

They will succeed because nothing will be able to stop them except for turning the United States into a totalitarian tin-pot concentration camp.

Source: ProPublica.

Viva los validates inmigrantes del mundo!

The more politicians and racists vilify migrants the stronger we get

Posted on June 17, 2018 by Migrant Tales

No matter how much politicians vilify migrants and continue to attack us, the more desperate their situation becomes. We, migrants, are a near-endless resource. As long as people can dream and hope, migration will remain. You cannot kill it. 

As a person born in Latin America, it is incredible how selective the media is in reporting racism. After so much tampering in our internal affairs while exploiting our wealth, the United States, specifically the likes of President Donald Trump, are “surprised” by the hundreds of thousands of migrants that are fleeing strife, war, chronic inequality, and poverty.

A simple question: I wonder why people are fleeing to the United State?


In the United States they separate children from their parents. In Europe and Finland we are more “civilized” since we don’t separate children but incarcerate them with their parents.

It is the same story in the Middle East after the invasion of Iraq in 2003. The United States and its European partners invade, pillage, kill hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and Middle Easterners and expect opportunistically people to stay, inhabitants of the misery, we created for them.

A simple question: I wonder why people are fleeing to Europe?

The environment is another problem of our making and it is hitting us hard but with a difference from the latter two examples: the disaster includes us, the perpetrators.

A simple question: I wonder who is to blame and what are we going to do?

No matter how much tin-pot populist like Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, Austrian chancellor Sebastian Kruz, Italy’s Lega Nord, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Denmark’s Islamophobia on steroids, and chaotic Brexit, try, we will prevail in the end.

Their knee-jerk reaction, their Islamophobia, and xenophobia, are ample proof of that.

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